Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) stock traded slightly lower on Wednesday, underperforming the broader technology sector even as major indexes showed mixed results.
The stock slipped less than 0.5%, while the Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE:XLK) gained 0.28%. The Nasdaq Composite was modestly higher, while the S&P 500 edged down 0.11%.
Microsoft Technical Picture Remains Mixed
Microsoft remains below several key moving averages, suggesting the stock is still working through a longer-term recovery phase.
Shares are down 14.6% over the past 12 months and trade 11.7% below the 200-day simple moving average. The stock also sits 4.7% below its 20-day SMA and roughly 2% below both its 50-day and 100-day SMAs.
The moving-average setup sends mixed signals. The 20-day SMA remains above the 50-day SMA, which supports the near-term trend. However, the 50-day SMA remains below the 200-day SMA following a death cross in January, reflecting longer-term weakness.
Momentum indicators also remain soft. The MACD sits below its signal line and the histogram remains negative, suggesting buying momentum has weakened in recent weeks.
Key resistance stands near $433, while support is around $401.
AI Growth Outlook Remains in Focus
Beyond the charts, investor attention remains firmly focused on Microsoft’s artificial intelligence opportunity and whether AI-driven revenue growth can justify the company’s rapidly expanding infrastructure investments.
In a note ahead of Microsoft management meetings in New York, BNP Paribas reiterated its Outperform rating and $555 price forecast, implying roughly 35% upside from the stock’s June 8 closing price of $411.70.
Analysts said the key investor debate centers on Copilot adoption, AI monetization, Azure demand, and the economics of increasingly complex AI workloads.
They also expect growing scrutiny of Microsoft’s AI infrastructure spending as hyperscalers invest aggressively in data centers and computing capacity.
The firm said recent disclosures tied to SpaceX’s AI cloud agreements (Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL) and Anthropic) suggest demand for AI infrastructure remains strong and may be larger than previously anticipated.
BNP estimates pricing gains could help push Azure growth into the 40% range, though capital expenditures may see another significant increase in calendar 2026.
Build 2026 Reinforces Microsoft’s AI Strategy
Following Microsoft’s Build 2026 conference, BNP said management reinforced its strategy of competing across the AI stack, from infrastructure and models to AI agents and applications.
However, analysts noted investor enthusiasm around Microsoft’s newly introduced MAI models has been limited because they are not yet viewed as competitive with leading frontier models from OpenAI and Anthropic.
BNP was more constructive on Microsoft’s agent-focused products, including Scout and Copilot Autopilot. Analysts said those offerings could create new consumption-based revenue streams that help offset rising AI computing costs.
The firm continues to view Microsoft as well-positioned to benefit from long-term growth in cloud computing, software development, productivity software, and generative AI, while warning that GPU supply constraints, heavy AI investment requirements, and competition in the AI market remain key risks.
Microsoft Price Action
MSFT Price Action: Microsoft shares were down 0.11% at $402.97 at the time of publication on Wednesday, according to Benzinga Pro data.
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